'Last Jedi' hate tweets were 'weaponized' by Russia, says study

The Brexit vote. The 2016 U.S. presidential election. And now ... the online reaction to The Last Jedi.

What do all these expressions of opinion have in common? All have been credibly accused after the fact of being skewed by Russian operatives.

The Last Jedi accusation comes in a new paper by Morton Bay, a Research Fellow at the Center for the Digital Future at the University of Southern California (George Lucas' alma mater). Bay analyzed all tweets sent directly to Last Jedi director Rian Johnson over a seven month period after the movie's release.

His conclusion? More than 50 percent of the negative tweets aimed at Johnson came from "bots, trolls/sock puppets or political activists using the debate to propagate messages supporting extreme right-wing causes and the discrimination of gender, race or sexuality," Bay writes. "A number of these users appear to be Russian trolls."

That last part is no mere guesswork; it's based on the list of 2,752 accounts that Twitter itself identified as being linked to Russia's Internet Research Agency, its so-called "troll farm." Of the nearly 1,000 users that tweeted at Johnson in this period, 16 are suspected Russian accounts — and they appear to have been just as obsessed with hating the movie as with promoting Trumpian causes.

The majority of these "almost exclusively tweeted about The Last Jedi, Rian Johnson or right-wing politics, typically retweeting personalities from the right or alt-right," the study says. Many repeated each others' talking points, such as this tweet from the now-deleted account @MarcoSo94862885: “So, now explain why Mark Hamil [sic] didn't like Luje [sic] in TLJ?"

The Russian accounts' goal appears to have been the same as it was in Brexit and the 2016 elections: to pile on discord that already existed in U.S. society, no matter where they could find it.

There were plenty of homegrown political activists attacking Johnson, too. Around 60 of the accounts were what you might classify as hardcore right-wing. Other than slapping Last Jedi, their tweets were virulently pro-Trump, pro-NRA, and anti-"SJW," whatever they took that to mean. In other words, there's a good deal of overlap here with the so-called GamerGate crowd.

The trolls, bots and alt-right haters made a lot of noise, to be sure. They cluster around hashtags such as #LastJediAwful. (They continue to do so in Johnson's mentions, even after the study period ended in July).

But Bay found they were in a clear minority: the number of accounts attacking the movie was less than 22 percent of all tweets sent to Johnson about The Last Jedi.

Mashable
is a global, multi-platform media and entertainment company. Powered by its own proprietary technology, Mashable is the go-to source for tech, digital culture and entertainment content for its dedicated and influential audience around the globe.